Forest City Comicon — Saturday at the London Convention Centre — has them all.

“There is something for everyone at this show,” boasted FCC spokesperson Johnathan Houghton. The annual autumn gathering of London nerds, in its fourth year, boasts more than 250 vendor tables. Exhibitors, as Houghton prefers to call them, come from as far away as Toronto, and beyond.

“What an exhibitor should do is aim to be as unique as possible,” in order to catch the attention of the thousands of attendees on Saturday,” Houghton says.

There are returning and new vendors in this year’s Comicon. One of the new ones is Londoner Daniel Turres, 25, who offers colourful fan art under the banner of his company Pop Fiction.

“(Saturday) would be my first comic-con event with my product,” Turres said. “I just started this business six months ago.”

Turres calls his collages of well-known pop-culture figures — from Batman to David Bowie to Harry Potter — “repurposed mixed-media digital art.” They can be as inexpensive as three prints for $10, or as pricey as $400 for an original, one-of-a-kind canvas.

The lifelong Londoner says his customers are most impressed with the variety of characters he features in his work.

One Turres Harry Potter piece has a background made up of pages from The Deathly Hallows, the seventh and final book in the J.K. Rowling series.

Turres says his art is almost like a form of recycling; since he borrows characters from comic companies and movie studios. His work falls into the category of fan or parody art, which means the characters remain the intellectual property of their owners.

Comicon isn’t just an opportunity to sell. Turres values the event as a way to make connections on the convention circuit. “It can be scary to reach out and share your art.”

And if you don’t have much disposable income, Houghton and his team have structured FCC so there are vendor tables more about having an experience than purchasing. London’s Digital Extremes, for instance, is debuting its new game, Amazing Eternals, Saturday.

You also can meet celebrity guests such as Billy Boyd, who played Pippin in the Lord of the Rings trilogy. Other artists include Southwestern Ontario’s own Jeff Lemire, the artist and writer behind such graphic novels as Roughneck and Essex County.

There also are plenty of vendors offering the meat-and-­potatoes of pop-culture conventions. “It wouldn’t be a comicon without racks of comics,” Houghton said.